Investigators Look Into Cause of Crane Collapse on Tappan Zee Bridge

Four people suffered minor injuries when the crane collapsed Tuesday on the Tappan Zee Bridge. Several agencies have already conducted interviews with the crane operator and others. Sarah Wallace reports. (Published Wednesday, July 20, 2016)

What to Know

A crane being used in the construction of the new Tappan Zee Bridge crashed onto the current span at about noon on Tuesday.

Two drivers and a worker were hurt, though their injuries were all considered minor

The bridge was closed for hours after the collapse

State and federal officials are investigating what caused a huge construction crane to collapse across the Tappan Zee Bridge Tuesday, an accident that somehow caused no serious injuries but added to a list of crane wrecks in recent years that have prompted initiatives to improve safety.

The state Department of Labor and the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration are among the agencies probing the accident, which blocked traffic on the vital Hudson River crossing for hours and kept a lane closed through the day Wednesday.

Gov. Cuomo said there was no immediate answer as to why the crane fell.

"I'm pushing very hard to get the agencies to accelerate and expedite the investigation because we want to know what it was," he said.

A large crane being used to construct the new Tappan Zee Bridge collapsed Tuesday, blocking all lanes for hours on the span it is replacing, closing the traffic artery and injuring four people. Ray Villeda reports.

(Published Tuesday, July 19, 2016)

The crawler crane, manufactured by the Manitowoc company, of Wisconsin, was less than a year old, according to Damien Lavera, a spokesman for Tappan Zee Constructors, the consortium of contractors building a $3.9 billion replacement for the Tappan Zee.

The crane was stationed on the deck of the new bridge, which is being built parallel to the old one, when its 250-foot-long boom collapsed. Part of it fell onto a construction platform between and beneath the two bridges. The other part sprawled across the busy lanes of the old bridge, forcing cars to swerve out of the way.

There are 28 cranes in operation on the bridge project to be completed by 2018 — many much larger than the one that toppled.

Crane safety began getting intense scrutiny in New York after a pair of disasters in 2008. In one, a nearly 200-foot-tall tower crane used in skyscraper construction fell near the U.N. headquarters on Manhattan's East Side, pulverizing buildings below and killing six construction workers and a tourist. Just two months later, another tower crane snapped, fell apart and crashed into a Manhattan apartment building, killing the crane operator and a worker on the ground.

There have been several smaller wrecks since then.

Last February in lower Manhattan, a crawler crane collapsed as it was being secured amid a strong wind, killing a pedestrian and injuring three other people.

Governor Cuomo says it's a miracle only a few people were injured after a crane collapsed on the Tappan Zee bridge. Andrew Siff has the latest.

(Published Tuesday, July 19, 2016)

As a result, Mayor de Blasio created a special task force that came up with new safety recommendations for cranes operating in the city. They included a recommendation that cranes be equipped with a "black box" that would indicate whether a crane had lifted too heavy a load.

The panel also suggested that cranes be equipped with so-called "anemometers" to measure wind gusts. Wind was not a factor in the Tappan Zee Bridge crash, officials have said.